These calls to `content_type` were triggering the deprecation from
c631e8d011 in upgraded applications.
We can use `media_type` in all of these cases to avoid the deprecation.
Since #35709, `Response#conten_type` returns only MIME type correctly.
It is a documented behavior that this method only returns MIME type, so
this change seems appropriate.
39de7fac05/actionpack/lib/action_dispatch/http/response.rb (L245-L249)
But unfortunately, some users expect this method to return all
Content-Type that does not contain charset. This seems to be breaking
changes.
We can change this behavior with the deprecate cycle.
But, in that case, a method needs that include Content-Type with
additional parameters. And that method name is probably the
`content_type` seems to properly.
So I changed the new behavior to more appropriate `media_type` method.
And `Response#content_type` changed (as the method name) to return Content-Type
header as it is.
Fixes#35709.
[Rafael Mendonça França & Yuuji Yaginuma ]
Allowing :controller and :action values to be specified via the path
in config/routes.rb has been an underlying cause of a number of issues
in Rails that have resulted in security releases. In light of this it's
better that controllers and actions are explicitly whitelisted rather
than trying to blacklist or sanitize 'bad' values.
Rails 4.x and earlier didn't support `Mime::Type[:FOO]`, so libraries
that support multiple Rails versions would've had to feature-detect
whether to use `Mime::Type[:FOO]` or `Mime::FOO`.
`Mime[:foo]` has been around for ages to look up registered MIME types
by symbol / extension, though, so libraries and plugins can safely
switch to that without breaking backward- or forward-compatibility.
Note: `Mime::ALL` isn't a real MIME type and isn't registered for lookup
by type or extension, so it's not available as `Mime[:all]`. We use it
internally as a wildcard for `respond_to` negotiation. If you use this
internal constant, continue to reference it with `Mime::ALL`.
Ref. efc6dd550e
Non-kwargs requests are deprecated now.
Guides are updated as well.
`post url, nil, nil, { a: 'b' }` doesn't make sense.
`post url, params: { y: x }, session: { a: 'b' }` would be an explicit way to do the same
In the current router DSL, using the +match+ DSL
method will match all verbs for the path to the
specified endpoint.
In the vast majority of cases, people are
currently using +match+ when they actually mean
+get+. This introduces security implications.
This commit disallows calling +match+ without
an HTTP verb constraint by default. To explicitly
match all verbs, this commit also adds a
:via => :all option to +match+.
Closes#5964